Professional Baker Teaches Rustic Italian, THE BEST White Bread EVER!!!
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- Опубліковано 21 вер 2024
- Watch and learn how to make this unbelievable Rustic Italian at home. No doubt the best white bread you will ever taste!!!
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I just made this bread last weekend exactly the way he said with the weights and ingredients and time and it was the BEST bread I've ever made. This is now my go to bread. Thank you so much.
What did you use for starter?
I don’t understand what he means
@@Idk-bs6in Starter is a term used for a naturally formed flour/water/yeast mixture. It uses "natural" yeast, found in the air and on the skins of fruits, like grapes, rather than commercial yeast, like "fresh yeast blocks" or "instant dry yeast". Search UA-cam for "Making Sourdough Starter" for more information about it and how to make and care for it. It takes about 10 days to get the thing going, so you're not going to make bread tomorrow.
I have given away small amounts of my starter to help others kick start their own batch. Ask around on social media if there's anyone near you that can give you a little.
Hi, Don. Did you proof the levain for 14 hours as well? He never offered a proofing time in the video.
@user-nm2cp3ot2d if you look up polish and levian it will explain each. The levian is basically some of his sourdough starter and polish is equal amount of water and flour with some yeast mixed and left out at room temp to ferment both of these pre ferments will be added to rest of the recipie. There are some great you tube videos that explain all the different pre ferments.
One of the best tutorials and bread videos known to man! Thank you for your time and effort in making this. Incredible recipe
What about showing the crumb. Are these loaves just to be used for stage props?
Great stuff !!
I wish he would show the crumb.
Me to.
I made this last night. I halved all the amounts to make 2 loaves, but forgot to half the yeast (1 g vs .5 g) in the poolish. it still came out great! I can't wait to do it right next time. My oven makes the crust a little darker than I like. Almost burned in a couple of places. I'm going to put foil over them about half way through the baking process next time.
My family is from NY and they all loved this bread. It's their new favorite. Thanks for sharing this great recipe.
A terrific video! You are a calm speaker and a good instructor - so glad you don't use annoying music and text everywhere. I SO MUCH wanted to see the inside of the bread ' cause that's the proof of the pudding (next time, I hope). Keep up your good work. You have great technique and are quite the pro.
I hate all the added music too, is usually annoying.
Great instructions and explanations without corny jokes and cheesy music... subscribed!
Couldn’t agree more. Love it without the music!!!
I made this recipe today, cut the recipe in half because I didn't need 4 loaves. We can't wait to try it. It looks fantastic. Thank
You for these videos. I have learned sooooo much from you. I will be taking your classes because I'm sure there's even more information in them. Once again, thank you for passing on your knowledge.
Ok, we just cut this bread, OMG! The taste and the crumb is fantastic.
The key to success of this recipe and others getting a group of flour's that you like and stick with them and learn how they mix and bake. All Flour hydrates at different levels. I switched flour recently and it takes a whole lot more water to make this bread correctly. I just started a batch and had to add at least 50 grams more water after I had done the first mix to the dough the dough was that stiff. I am letting the 2nd bulk ferment longer now just to try to save what I made. The bread may not come out as well as I had hoped but it is better than throwing the whole batch in to the trash.
I like your vids, now if I could find more people to give out the amount of bread I have been baking, I would be golden.
Where have you been all life? Why do I find you after one year of frustration and very little success with sourdough? Bless you, please keep the videos coming 🙏. Great content!
Wow, thank you!
I must say this is One of the best tutorials 👍👍👍😍
Hi there and thanks for the super video. Question, you mentioned that the hydration was 73%, could this be an error. When you the math, it comes out around 61% with toatal four being 2140 grams and total water being 1305 grams.
Good video but missing the grand finale after 23 min I was hoping you will cut the bread here the crust under knife and see that famous cels that you are talking over and over.What a shame...
Total fail. He doesn’t cut open any of his breads. Killjoy.
Exactly. Show us inside
Why is the recipe not listed under the video???
I used 00 flour and a 00 starter (70% hydration, adjusted water in the final mix). I baked this formula two times. First time a bit dry. I guess that was the flour. Second time with just a little splash extra was perfect. Thank you so much.
Great video, I just wish you cut one open so we could see how the inside formed.
Cut the recipe in half but followed to the T. Was absolutely outstanding. Thanks.
I just found your channel, and want to say as a home bread baker, this channel is great. Your presentation, content and calming voice to watch this. I bake yeast breads or sourdough. I never worked with a poolish, however, I have added a pinch of yeast to my sourdough mix, and found I get a better loaf. I know it as a hybrid loaf.
Water = 626 (poolish) + 105 (levain) + 579 (dough) = 1310
Flour = 626 (poolish) + 105 (levain) + 1412 (dough) = 2143
1310 / 2143 = 61% hydration. How is this anything close to 73% hydration?
Been a long time since I’ve watched such a talented baker. Thanks!
That is absolutely beautiful bread, takes me back to my childhood in Brooklyn where you can visit the local bakeries at midnight and get the loaves fresh from the oven.
I totally agree!
Thank you for the videos!
I am really enjoying the Italian and baguette formula.
This is my 5 th batch of the Rustic Italian and with your starter formulas I have not made a bad batch. This is the best bread I have ever made.
Awesome video going to def try this, but brah left me hanging when the bread wasn't cut open
I have baked to this recipe twice and method twice now and the result and taste is really great. Big thanks and thumbs up from me
@fredblues4250 I couldn't find the amount of flour and salt to add after the poolish and levain. Do you know or is there a written recipe somewhere?
Best Bread I have ever tried or baked
Thank you for your fantastic teaching
Just a point in clarification, given the poolish & levain quantities - 1300 + 210 and stated water (580g) yields 650+105+580 + 45 oil = 1380g hydration(given the 100 % hydration of the preferments). The stated dough weight is 3500g and subtracting out approximately 42 g salt gives a flour weight of 3500 - 1380 - 42 = 2078g or a hydration level of 66.4% . . . or am I missing something . . . The dough certainly looks more slack that that . . . Beautiful batard BTW
I think you are the best baker on youtube.
Nicely done. I would have liked to see the inside.
Much of this was over my head. PERFECT! I've enjoyed making bread in the past and was looking to up my game so to speak and your knowledge and enthusiasm tells me that I can learn a lot here.
Back again. Cool mornings now in NY state. I need my re- orientation. Thanks again.
I just made this recipe again yesterday - 1/2 recipe yielded 2 loaves 876 gms each. I substitute the levain with a whole wheat poolish of the same weight. Delicious bread. Remarkable presentation and instruction. Thank you very much @kingdombread-tampa for sharing so much of your knowledge, wisdom, and techniques.
Have just subbed to your channel today and loving the videos. I have just started homebaking through covid and am so grateful to see pro's in action talking about their recipes and handling dough and equipment.
I am curious about your crumb structure for a few of your videos. I would love to see some bread cutting and cross section views if you didn't mind. Just a suggestion from a curious learner. 😉😎 Keep up the great videos! 🙏🏼
Will do, thanks for the support.
@@kingdombread-tampa2932 The all demonstration was amazing, my only regret was like Jeffrey mentioned the cutting of the bread to demonstrate the crumb. I just subscribe to your video, you're amazing
I thought I'd let you know, since I found this recipe I haven't made any other bread. It's perfect every time. I hadn't seen the previous video with the ratio system but one I did, I got and have never looked back. Thanks for this.
Did I miss something? I don’t see an actual recipe with quantities of ingredients for the poolish and liquid levain🤷🏻♀️
@@janetra1111 Hi Janet. The Poolish and Levain ratios are at this point in the video. ua-cam.com/video/tzrSdOUijZ8/v-deo.html If you're recipe isn't working, watch the video describing the percentages. ua-cam.com/video/PyJm1v23wgc/v-deo.html Once I watched that, I got it. Just remember, if you're using a Poolish or Levain, subtract those quantities from the total. I hope this helps.
@@ddbruno Thank you so much. I’ll check out the video then I’ll bake some beautiful bread 🥖
I just made this for pizza crusts. I've always used a ferment but never minded the percentages as closely as this recipe. For levain I had a freeze dried "SF Sourdough" culture that I resurrected a month ago and it's nice and active and the only addition was 1% malt powder. Handling was similar but no folds. Straight from the mixer into the bulk for 2 hours then balled up and kept cool for 2 more hours. Then on the counter until 67-70f. Cooked on stone at 500f. In my past, I have made thousands of pizzas using the PF, or "old dough" method as a one-man wood fired operation but never had a pizza crust come out like this. This recipe is perfect for pizza and stretched beautifully! Next time I'm going to use 90/10 poolish/levain rather than 80/20. Not because it wasn't awesome but I want to try just a touch of sour. (side note: I added malt because of the relatively short proof of
Thank you for the great video. Tried to recap the figures indicated in the video. Could u please confirm? Can't wait to try this recipe.
Poolish
White flour 626 g
Yeast 1 g
Water 626 g
White liquid levain
White flour 100 g
Water 100 g
Starter 10 g
Rustic Italian dough
White flour 1412 g
Olive oil 42 g
Poolish 1253 g
White liquid levain 210 g
Water 24°C 579 g
Salt 45 g
Total
White flour 2143 g
Yeast 1 g
Water 1320 g
Olive oil 42 g
Salt 45 g
Total Weight 3551 g (887,5 g per loaf)
% Hydration 61,60 %
% Salt 2,10 %
Very useful of you. Thanks. Looks accurate, but he quoted 73% hydration, so he calculated the water wrong as you found out. Others noticed this and he acknowledged it in another post. Happy baking!!!
Just tried it. Amazing bread indeed! Thank you for sharing
Wonderful and instructional video tutorial. Thank you!
awesome video. explained to me things I been wondering for years about dough development
Indeed it is the best white bread I have ever made, it is now my wife's favourite
, thanks for teaching us 🙏
Cool, and thanks for joining the Academy.
I make the bread yesterday I divided the recipe in half, the bread come out absolutely perfect totally different to any bread I make before absolutely delicious ,I used King Arthur all purpose flour 11.7 protein what flour you use? Thanks for sheer this amazing recipe i subscriber forever now 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Very grateful to you for sharing your knowledge and passion!
Going to use this recipe tomorrow....very excited.
Thanks for this wonderful recipe. I am wondering if the recipe listed at 3:02 is correct? when adding all the water ( which are 579+628+105= 1313) divided by the total flour (which are 1412+628+105= 2146) , it comes out the total hydration is around 61% instead of what you said around 73% at 3:30.
Was wondering the same thing I couldn't figure that out
Going to try this...as this is a new skill im trying to master! Looks delicious 😋! Thanks for sharing!
This is basically what Raymond Calvel called "levain de pâte", or bread made with two pre-ferments. The Poolish gives the natural levain a bit of help. It decreases production time and produces a loaf that is somewhat lighter in texture than a pure sourdough, while still more flavorful that a direct method bread. I have made this recipe and find that it's more trouble than it is worth. Like my usual sourdough, it takes two days, but requires the creation of two preferments and the resulting flavor is not as good as sourdough.
I learned so much and your presentation is spot on. Thank you.
Hello can I half the recipe make 2 bread. Thanks for recipe
i made 1/2 the recipe today - started it yesterday afternoon - followed the recipe exactly, and all i can say is.... WOW... best bread i have made ... i will make this again.... probably this week... a bit of work... but well worth the time... thanks
How much flour did you use? and salt? I don't believe he said or else I missed it each time I watched it.
How did you follow the recipe exactly when it did not include the dry flour or salt weights? Or protein content of the flour used?
I can’t picture my Italian grandmother going through such a complicated procedure to make a loaf of bread.
I made this bread and its beautiful. Thank you
Thank you very much for this, that looks just sensational!!
The best Italian Bread for me. Thanks for sharing. Just a suggestion. It would be of great
help, easier to take a copy of the recipe.....If the recipe was printed below...not on the screen
as you are speaking. I want to see and listen to you & watch video. Later copy the recipe. Thanks again.
It was Fantastic. NEVER had an Italian Bread made so simple and I am looking forward to making it soon. Your delivery is easy to Learn. Aria
Just do a screenshot on your phone when the ingredients appear on the screen.
you have to cut it open so we can see and eat some please , great video i enjoyed it
I can't believe a 25 minute video on bread making and only showing what the outside looks like. The inside is ultimately important.
how come he did not cut the loaf so we can see inside.
Thank you, bread looks great. You have to cut the bread to show finished product.
Yes he must cut the bread to show us!!!
Amazing videos but wish you would cut the bread at the end to show the cell structure
Looks great and will try. I wish you would cut open a loaf so we can see the open crumb...
Perfect. This guy knows how to do it ;-)
I love bread, i love learning how to make bread. That being said it is the most difficult thing to get good at for me. Cheers
Given your recipe (formula) - I calculate 63% Hydration. Total flour: Dough flour + poolish flour + levain flour = 2145g. Total water: Dough water + Poolish water + Levain water + EVOO = 1353g. 1353g / 2145g = 63%. In your video, you comment that this is a 72% hydration. What did I miss? Thanks in advance for your reply.
Love these videos and I’ve turned out some beautiful bread thanks to your wonderful straightforward explanations, but could you please use Celsius temps too (especially as everything else is in grams/metric), for your Australian/European followers. I can never understand why America uses the imperial system when rest of world is all metric. Thankyou.
That is the nicest looking Italian bread I have seen in a very long time !
Thank you, it is relatively easy to make with good procedure.
Hope you enjoy the breads!
@@kingdombread-tampa2932 what do you think gives the crust that dark color?
@@lespaul8818 The fermentation and a good, deep bake with proper steam.
This bread turned out so amazing!! Thank you for this bread recipe. The crust is the best!! In the video you suggested trying a biga preferment. How do I swap out the Poolish for a biga? Is it a straight swap?
Why wouldn't you put the measurements in the description. It would make it so much easier for us people out here. Especially those of us that only have a phone to watch these videos on. Thank you
Never thought about it, thanks for the tip.
Good luck with your baking.
This is exactly what I'm looking for but where are the instructions for the levain and poolish? I really want to try this. Would someone link the videos for me please? Thanks so much!
I use my bread making machine to mix and make the dough. But take the dough out ,put it in the breadpan and bake it in the oven...best of both worlds😁
Great! video thanks
Excellent video again, thank you. But something is wrong in the recipe with the amount of water? If you add 580gr. of water you have a total hydration of about
63% this is quite stiff. Your total water is 580+650+105+42=1377. Your flour is 1412+650+105=2167
Total dough with salt round 3590gr.
I understood something wrong?
Thank you
I made this bread yesterday along with your Volkorn Rye bread and they are both the best breads I have ever made. I made sure to log in today, subscribe and like the videos that i watched. I would like to ask you a favor. If you could list your recipe under the video it would be much easier to follow.
Wondering what kind of flour he used. I also am wondering what the crumb structure looks like inside-he never cut the bread open!
I'd like to make a suggestion regarding your embedded recipe instructions at the 2:50 mark. It says "100% White Flour: 1412 g." Looking at this from a mathematical stand point I asked myself, "Is that '100% White Flour' or 100% as a value?" I discerned the meaning but I would suggest a different layout. Perhaps, "1412 g. White Flour" followed by a line stating "Associated Ratios."
One more comment, and I know this sounds like "food porn" but a cut into the bread to see the crumb would be nice.
I'm trying this tomorrow so, wish me luck.
Well, a little to somber for me but to each his own. The killer was NOT cutting into the bread. Big mistake for me. Bread looked delicious and the dough was beautiful. Very professional handling.
Hi, great video, but next time, if I could see the final product to be cut and see the inside texture of the bread !
First off, I loved the results of this recipe. I’m curious how you ended up with the 73% hydration number that you quoted.
My calculations result in 61%. I assumed the levain was 100% hydration.
1310 g water/2143 g flour.
Actually you are correct, I had transcribed the formula incorrectly. Feel free to add water as necessary to obtain the hydration you feel comfortable with. If I recall correctly, it is about 200 g. water for 73%.
@@kingdombread-tampa2932
Okay. The dough is so extensible that even the 61% felt like it was more hydrated. I’ve since done a 65, and I’ll try a 70% next
Where did you purchase the inserts for your oven? Is this a material I can purchase and cut to size? Great video. Easy to follow.
Thank you for a very nice and instructional video. This bread is now baking as I write. I have, however, one small question: you mention at 5:00 to 5:27 the reasons the KitchenAid foodprocessor is not your favorite. Today I was warming up to buy one of these, so I thought I would ask: which foodprocessor do you like or maybe even recommend for mixing dough?
I am a big fan of your videos, and also a subscriber of your Online Artisan Baking Academy, I bought the course of Building a Bread Baking Foundation which I have been really enjoying. I would like to make this bread, but as many others, including you, have pointed out, the formula has been transcribed incorrectly. Not only does the hydration not add up, but the percentage of the olive oil also seems off, as it came out not even 2% according to my calculations, while in the video it says 3%. I wonder if you would be so kind and publish the corrected formula.
This bread looks great. Could you please post a written recepie?
INGREDIENTS
Makes 1 loaf (~900g)
• Poolish: 12-14hrs @25°C to triple
- 0.3g instant dried yeast
- 156g wheat flour
- 156g water
• Levain: ~8h @25°C to double
- 3g liquid levain
- 25g water
- 25g wheat flour
• Dough:
- 312g poolish [88%]
- 53g levain [15%]
- 145g water [41%]
- 353g wheat flour [100%]
- 10g salt [2.8%]
- 11g extra-virgin olive oil [3.1%]
METHOD
• 00:00 Prepare the poolish
• 08:00 Feed levain
• 16:00 Prepare the dough - use the paddle attachment:
- Mix water, poolish and levain at mid-low speed for 2min
- Add the flour and salt and mix at mid-low speed for 5min + scrape and turn the dough up side down (S&T) + repeat
- Spread the olive oil over the dough's surface, dip it into the dough with your fingers and then knead at mid-low speed for 4min + D&V
- Increase the speed to mid-high then knead for 1min + S&T -> should get window pane
• 16:28 Do a set of 8 stretch & folds; cover and let it rest for 15 minutes.
• 16:45 Check the dough every ½ h:
- If domed top and sides showing fold lines -> let it rise for another 15min
- If flat top and sides without fold lines -> do a set of coil folds
- End of the bulk fermentation: dough inflated, light and aerated (feel with a moistened hand)
• 18:15 Shape as a batard then put it in a banneton (or on a couche , if doing more than one loaf)
• 18:20 Proof: ~2h @25°C
• 20:20 Bake in a pre-heated dutch oven: 30min @240°C with steam + 20min @230°C without steam
• 21:10 Remove from the oven and let it rest for 2 hrs before slicing
@@caasr57
Thank you for sending the written recepie.
Your videos are awesome. I am learning so much with each one. Just to be clear, your levain is left on the counter over the 12-16 hours not in the fridge?
You are correct
As always thank you so much for your videos. I tried this last week, but of course scaled back to smaller amount. I felt I was off with the hydration, had to add flour, but didn't pay attention to add more salt, the bread lacked flavor naturally, but was nevertheless very chewy and just awesome color and crumb, so I'd like to give this another go. My 2 questions if I may are: 1. with final hydration around 70%, do you include the water and flour in the white levain in addition to those in the poolish in your calculations for final hydration percentage?
2. with white levain does it need more time than traditional spelt levain to ferment, should I prepare it prior to the poolish to get good fermentation? the poolish was way more fermented and had grown substantially more than the levain.
Thanks so much!!
The hydration is calculated with total flour and total water, so yes the flour and water in the poolish and levain are contributors. Unfortunately, in this particular video, I had transcribed the formula incorrectly, must have been a long day.
I keep my starter in a warmer part of my house and the poolish in a cooler part so they are ready at the same time
I'm looking for ways to make artisinal/rustic looking bread that's shaped like a loaf you'd find at the supermarket. I just really like the idea of every slice being the same size, all equally useable for sandwiches.
Any advice?
He shows this technique in his ciabatta video. Instead of rolling the ends to a point, he tucks them under, to square off the ends.
@@cmackcolbert8649 Thanks.
Was a bread-maker years ago. Starting again.
Amazing
Very nice breads. I really like your videos.
Glad you like them!
Maybe you would like the Foundation class at the Academy.onlineartisanbakingacademy.thinkific.com/
All the best!
like the last shaping method , is it possible to see it closer or from a different angle as we cannot see the other side of the dough while you are shaping it.Thanks
Do you have this written recipe to share? I need to adjust to make just a couple loaves and want to make sure I calculate correctly. Thanks for the awesome video!
There it is..
INGREDIENTS
Makes 1 loaf (~900g)
• Poolish: 12-14hrs @25°C to triple
- 0.3g instant dried yeast
- 156g wheat flour
- 156g water
• Levain: ~8h @25°C to double
- 3g liquid levain
- 25g water
- 25g wheat flour
• Dough:
- 312g poolish [88%]
- 53g levain [15%]
- 145g water [41%]
- 353g wheat flour [100%]
- 10g salt [2.8%]
- 11g extra-virgin olive oil [3.1%]
METHOD
• 00:00 Prepare the poolish
• 08:00 Feed levain
• 16:00 Prepare the dough - use the paddle attachment:
- Mix water, poolish and levain at mid-low speed for 2min
- Add the flour and salt and mix at mid-low speed for 5min + scrape and turn the dough up side down (S&T) + repeat
- Spread the olive oil over the dough's surface, dip it into the dough with your fingers and then knead at mid-low speed for 4min + D&V
- Increase the speed to mid-high then knead for 1min + S&T -> should get window pane
• 16:28 Do a set of 8 stretch & folds; cover and let it rest for 15 minutes.
• 16:45 Check the dough every ½ h:
- If domed top and sides showing fold lines -> let it rise for another 15min
- If flat top and sides without fold lines -> do a set of coil folds
- End of the bulk fermentation: dough inflated, light and aerated (feel with a moistened hand)
• 18:15 Shape as a batard then put it in a banneton (or on a couche , if doing more than one loaf)
• 18:20 Proof: ~2h @25°C
• 20:20 Bake in a pre-heated dutch oven: 30min @240°C with steam + 20min @230°C without steam
• 21:10 Remove from the oven and let it rest for 2 hrs before slicing
Poolish
White flour: 626g
Water: 626g
Yeast: 1g
Levain
White flour: 100g
Water: 100g
Starter: 10g
Superb 🙏🏼
I wish you would have shown us what the inside looked like.
Very professionally presented information, without any hype. Just one question, how did you create the steam? I looks like a cast iron skillet with something in it, with ice added, and water, but I can't see what was in the skillet. Can you please briefly explain? Thank you.
Yes, steam is essential for proper loaf expansion, crust formation and coloration. In the skillet are lava rocks, using crushed ice and water.
@@kingdombread-tampa2932 Thank you so much for replying, sir. I appreciate it.
I'm looking for a recipe for a loave of Italian Knot bread.
Thanks
Amazing looking bread! Appreciate your detailed explanation! Is you oven a Convection one? I do not like my convection oven for baking bread... but unfortunately it does not have an option to turn off convection...
In artisan breads, especially larger loaves, It is best to not use a fan, as the heat is mostly surface related, and the crust may form and darken before the interior is properly baked.
If these preferments can't sit long. Do you need to be making bread daily?
Wonderful presentation, although I won't be making 4 loaves at once at home ;) Would love to see the crumb! One small thing - there is a high pitched droning whine throughout the presentation, not sure where it came from, but detracts from video. Will watch more videos!
I think it was the convection oven's fan as it was preheating, and later cooling off.
this is an excellent bread, the only problem with the recipe is that it is practically impossible to make it in the morning without getting up in the middle of the night
When doing the math to you add the prefermemts flour and water values normally? Like if its 200/200 do you just add 200 to the total flour and 200 to the total water?
Or is there a better method for getting the hydration with preferments involved
i do enjoe ,congratulation
Something doesn't work in this recipe. The hydration level per the quantities shown in 2:50 is 61%. Verbally, the (incredible) baker that hydration is around 73% (~3:33). Has anyone looked into this?
Thank you for these videos and I'm excited to join your Academy as I've been having some difficulty. I've tried this recipe 3 times now and I never get the oven rise that you do. My bread turns out quite dense. Your dough is much more fluid than mine, which is more elastic-y. I've had it mixing for 7 minutes and a bit more and less. Any ideas on what I might be doing wrong? Thanks
Perhaps your flour absorbs more water than the flour I have in the video. The flour used is ~11.0% protein. As well, your pre-ferments may not be a full maturation.